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Cryptography Overview

Cryptography Overview. John Mitchell. Cryptography. Is A tremendous tool The basis for many security mechanisms Is not The solution to all security problems Reliable unless implemented properly Reliable unless used properly Something you should try to invent yourself unless

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Cryptography Overview

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  1. Cryptography Overview John Mitchell

  2. Cryptography • Is • A tremendous tool • The basis for many security mechanisms • Is not • The solution to all security problems • Reliable unless implemented properly • Reliable unless used properly • Something you should try to invent yourself unless • you spend a lot of time becoming an expert • you subject your design to outside review

  3. Basic Concepts in Cryptography • Encryption scheme: • functions to encrypt, decrypt data • key generation algorithm • Secret key vs. public key • Public key: publishing key does not reveal key-1 • Secret key: more efficient, generally key = key-1 • Hash function, MAC • Map input to short hash; ideally, no collisions • MAC (keyed hash) used for message integrity • Signature scheme • Functions to sign data, verify signature

  4. Five-Minute University • Everything you could remember, five years after taking CS255 … ? Father Guido Sarducci

  5. Web Purchase

  6. Secure communication

  7. Secure Sockets Layer / TLS • Standard for Internet security • Originally designed by Netscape • Goal: “... provide privacy and reliability between two communicating applications” • Two main parts • Handshake Protocol • Establish shared secret key using public-key cryptography • Signed certificates for authentication • Record Layer • Transmit data using negotiated key, encryption function

  8. SSL/TLS Cryptography • Public-key encryption • Key chosen secretly (handshake protocol) • Key material sent encrypted with public key • Symmetric encryption • Shared (secret) key encryption of data packets • Signature-based authentication • Client can check signed server certificate • And vice-versa, in principal • Hash for integrity • Client, server check hash of sequence of messages • MAC used in data packets (record protocol)

  9. Example cryptosystems • One-time pad • “Theoretical idea,” but leads to stream cipher • XOR is important in crypto • Feistel construction for symmetric key crypto • Iterate a “scrambling function” • Examples: DES, Lucifer, FREAL, Khufu, Khafre, LOKI, GOST, CAST, Blowfish, … • AES (Rijndael) is also block cipher, but different • Complexity-based public-key cryptography • Modular exponentiation is a “one-way” fctns • Examples: RSA, El Gamal, elliptic curve systems, ...

  10. One-time pad • Secret-key encryption scheme (symmetric) • Encrypt plaintext by xor with sequence of bits • Decrypt ciphertext by xor with same bit sequence • Scheme for pad of length n • Set P of plaintexts: all n-bit sequences • Set C of ciphertexts: all n-bit sequences • Set K of keys: all n-bit sequences • Encryption and decryption functions encrypt(key, text) = key  text (bit-by-bit) decrypt(key, text) = key  text (bit-by-bit)

  11. Evaluation of one-time pad • Advantages • Easy to compute encrypt, decryptfromkey, text • As hard to break as possible • This is an information-theoretically secure cipher • Given ciphertext, all possible plaintexts are equally likely, assuming that key is chosen randomly • Disadvantage • Key is as long as the plaintext • How does sender get key to receiver securely? Idea for stream cipher: use pseudo-random generators for key...

  12. Feistel networks • Many block algorithms are Feistel networks • A block cipher encrypts data in blocks • Encryption of block n+1 may depend on block n • Feistel network is astandard construction for • Iterating a function f on parts of a message • Producing an invertible transformation • AES (Rijndael) is related • Also a block cipher with repeated rounds • Not a Feistel network

  13. L i-1 R i-1 L i R i Feistel network: One Round Divide n-bit input in half and repeat • Scheme requires • Function f(Ri-1 ,Ki) • Computation for Ki • e.g., permutation of key K • Advantage • Systematic calculation • Easy if f is table, etc. • Invertible if Ki known • Get Ri-1 from Li • Compute f(R i-1,Ki) • Compute Li-1 by  f K i 

  14. Data Encryption Standard • Developed at IBM, some input from NSA, widely used • Feistel structure • Permute input bits • Repeat application of a S-box function • Apply inverse permutation to produce output • Worked well in practice (but brute-force attacks now) • Efficient to encrypt, decrypt • Not provably secure • Improvements • Triple DES, AES (Rijndael)

  15. + Block cipher modes (for DES, AES, …) • ECB – Electronic Code Book mode • Divide plaintext into blocks • Encrypt each block independently, with same key • CBC – Cipher Block Chaining • XOR each block with encryption of previous block • Use initialization vector IV for first block • OFB – Output Feedback Mode • Iterate encryption of IV to produce stream cipher • CFB – Cipher Feedback Mode • Output block yi = input xi encyrptK(yi-1)

  16. Electronic Code Book (ECB) Plain Text Plain Text Block Cipher Block Cipher Block Cipher Block Cipher Ciphe rTex tCip herT Problem: Identical blocks encrypted identically No integrity check

  17. Block Cipher Block Cipher Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) Plain Text Plain Text IV Block Cipher Block Cipher Ciphe rTex tCip herT Advantages: Identical blocks encrypted differently Last ciphertext block depends on entire input

  18. Comparison (for AES, by Bart Preneel) Similar plaintext blocks produce similar ciphertext (see outline of head) No apparent pattern

  19. RC4 stream cipher – “Ron’s Code” • Design goals (Ron Rivest, 1987): • speed • support of 8-bit architecture • simplicity (to circumvent export regulations) • Widely used • SSL/TLS • Windows, Lotus Notes, Oracle, etc. • Cellular Digital Packet Data • OpenBSD pseudo-random number generator

  20. RSA Trade Secret • History • 1994 – leaked to cypherpunks mailing list • 1995 – first weakness (USENET post) • 1996 – appeared in Applied Crypto as “alleged RC4” • 1997 – first published analysis • Weakness is predictability of first bits; best to discard them

  21. Encryption/Decryption key 000111101010110101 state  plain text plain text = cipher text cipher t • Stream cipher: one-time pad based on pseudo-random generator

  22. Security • Goal: indistinguishable from random sequence • given part of the output stream, it is impossible to distinguish it from a random string • Problems • Second byte [MS01] • Second byte of RC4 is 0 with twice expected probability • Related key attack [FMS01] • Bad to use many related keys (see WEP 802.11b) • Recommendation • Discard the first 256 bytes of RC4 output [RSA, MS]

  23. for i := 0 to 255 S[i] := i j := 0 for i := 0 to 255 j := j + S[i] + key[i] swap (S[i], S[j]) i, j := 0 repeat i := i + 1 j := j + S[i] swap (S[i], S[j]) output (S[ S[i] + S[j] ]) Key scheduling Random generator Complete Algorithm (all arithmetic mod 256) Permutation of 256 bytes, depending on key i j +24

  24. Complexity Classes Answer in polynomial space may need exhaustive search If yes, can guess and check in polynomial time Answer in polynomial time, with high probability Answer in polynomial time compute answer directly hard PSpace NP BPP P easy

  25. One-way functions • A function f is one-way if it is • Easy to compute f(x), given x • Hard to compute x, given f(x), for most x • Examples (we believe they are one way) • f(x) = divide bits x = y@z and multiply f(x)=y*z • f(x) = 3x mod p, where p is prime • f(x) = x3 mod pq, where p,q are primes with |p|=|q|

  26. One-way trapdoor • A function f is one-way trapdoor if • Easy to compute f(x), given x • Hard to compute x, given f(x), for most x • Extra “trapdoor” information makes it easy to compute x from f(x) • Example (we believe) • f(x) = x3 mod pq, where p,q are primes with |p|=|q| • Compute cube root using (p-1)*(q-1)

  27. Public-key Cryptosystem • Trapdoor function to encrypt and decrypt • encrypt(key, message) • decrypt(key -1, encrypt(key, message)) = message • Resists attack • Cannot compute m from encrypt(key, m) and key, unless you have key-1 key pair

  28. Example: RSA • Arithmetic modulo pq • Generate secret primes p, q • Generate secret numbers a, b with xab  x mod pq • Public encryption key n, a • Encrypt(n, a, x) = xa mod n • Private decryption key n, b • Decrypt(n, b, y) = yb mod n • Main properties • This works • Cannot compute b from n,a • Apparently, need to factor n = pq n

  29. How RSA works (quick sketch) • Let p, q be two distinct primes and let n=p*q • Encryption, decryption based on group Zn* • For n=p*q, order (n) = (p-1)*(q-1) • Proof: (p-1)*(q-1) = p*q - p - q + 1 • Key pair: a, b with ab  1 mod (n) • Encrypt(x) = xa mod n • Decrypt(y) = yb mod n • Since ab  1 mod (n), have xab  x mod n • Proof: if gcd(x,n) = 1, then by general group theory, otherwise use “Chinese remainder theorem”.

  30. How well does RSA work? • Can generate modulus, keys fairly efficiently • Efficient rand algorithms for generating primes p,q • May fail, but with low probability • Given primes p,q easy to compute n=p*q and (n) • Choose a randomly with gcd(a, (n))=1 • Compute b = a-1 mod (n) by Euclidean algorithm • Public key n, a does not reveal b • This is not proven, but believed • But if n can be factored, all is lost ... Public-key crypto is significantly slower than symmetric key crypto

  31. Message integrity • For RSA as stated, integrity is a weak point • encrypt(k*m) = (k*m)e = ke * me = encrypt(k)*encrypt(m) • This leads to “chosen ciphertext” form of attack • If someone will decrypt new messages, then can trick them into decrypting m by asking for decrypt(ke *m) • Implementations reflect this problem • “The PKCS#1 … RSA encryption is intended primarily to provide confidentiality. … It is not intended to provide integrity.” RSA Lab. Bulletin • Additional mechanisms provide integrity

  32. Cryptographic hash functions • Length-reducing function h • Map arbitrary strings to strings of fixed length • One way (“preimage resistance”) • Given y, hard to find x with h(x)=y • Collision resistant • Hard to find any distinct m, m’ with h(m)=h(m’) • Also useful: 2nd preimage resistance • Given x and y=h(x) hard to find x’x with h(x’)=h(x) • Collision resistance  2nd preimage resistance

  33. Iterated hash functions • Repeat use of block cipher or custom function • Pad input to some multiple of block length • Iterate a length-reducing function f • f : 22k -> 2k reduces bits by 2 • Repeat h0= some seed hi+1 = f(hi, xi) • Some final function g completes calculation x Pad to x=x1x2 …xk xi f(xi-1) f g

  34. Applications of one-way hash • Password files (one way) • Digital signatures (collision resistant) • Sign hash of message instead of entire message • Data integrity • Compute and store hash of some data • Check later by recomputing hash and comparing • Keyed hash for message authentication • MAC – Message Authentication Code

  35. MAC: Message Authentication Code • General pattern of use • Sender sends Message & MAC(Message), M1 • Receiver receives both parts • Receiver makes his own MAC(Message),M2 • If M2 != M1, data has been corrupted • If M2 == M1, data is valid • Need for shared key • Suppose an attacker can compute MAC(x) • Intercept M and Hash(M) and resend as M' and Hash(M') • Receiver cannot detect that message has been altered.

  36. Block Cipher Basic CBC-MAC Plain Text Plain Text IV=0 Block Cipher Block Cipher Block Cipher CBC block cipher, discarding all but last output block Additional post-processing (e.g, encrypt with second key) can improve output

  37.  HMAC: Keyed Hash-Based MAC • Internet standard RFC2104 • Uses hash of key, message: HMACK(M) = Hash[ (K+ XOR opad) || Hash[(K+ XOR ipad)||M)] ] • Low overhead • opad, ipad are constants • Any of MD5, SHA-1, RIPEMD-160, … can be used K+ is the key padded out to size

  38. Digital Signatures • Public-key encryption • Alice publishes encryption key • Anyone can send encrypted message • Only Alice can decrypt messages with this key • Digital signature scheme • Alice publishes key for verifying signatures • Anyone can check a message signed by Alice • Only Alice can send signed messages

  39. Properties of signatures • Functions to sign and verify • Sign(Key-1, message) • Verify(Key, x, m) = • Resists forgery • Cannot compute Sign(Key-1, m) from m and Key • Resists existential forgery: given Key, cannot produce Sign(Key-1, m) for any random or otherwise arbitrary m • true if x = Sign(Key-1, m) • false otherwise

  40. RSA Signature Scheme • Publish decryption instead of encryption key • Alice publishes decryption key • Anyone can decrypt a message encrypted by Alice • Only Alice can send encrypt messages • In more detail, • Alice generates primes p, q and key pair a, b • Sign(x) = xa mod n • Verify(y) = yb mod n • Since ab  1 mod (n), have xab  x mod n

  41. Public-Key Infrastructure (PKI) • Anyone can send Bob a secret message • Provided they know Bob’s public key • How do we know a key belongs to Bob? • If imposter substitutes another key, read Bob’s mail • One solution: PKI • Trusted root authority (VeriSign, IBM, United Nations) • Everyone must know the verification key of root authority • Check your browser; there are hundreds!! • Root authority can sign certificates • Certificates identify others, including other authorities • Leads to certificate chains

  42. Back to TLS ClientHello S C ServerHello, [Certificate], [ServerKeyExchange], [CertificateRequest], ServerHelloDone [Certificate], ClientKeyExchange, [CertificateVerify] Finished switch to negotiated cipher switch to negotiated cipher Finished

  43. Use of cryptography Version, Crypto choice, nonce S C Version, Choice, nonce, Signed certificate containing server’s public key Ks Secret key K encrypted with server’s key Ks switch to negotiated cipher Hash of sequence of messages Hash of sequence of messages

  44. More detail … ClientHelloCSC, VerC, SuiteC, NC ServerHelloS  CVerS, SuiteS, NS,signCA{S, KS} ClientVerify C  SsignCA{ C, VC} {VerC, SecretC} signC {Hash(Master(NC, NS, SecretC) + Pad2 + Hash(Msgs + C + Master(NC, NS, SecretC) + Pad1)) } (Change to negotiated cipher) ServerFinished S  C{ Hash(Master(NC, NS, SecretC) + Pad2 + Hash(Msgs + S + Master(NC, NS, SecretC) + Pad1)) } ClientFinishedC  S{ Hash(Master(NC, NS, SecretC) + Pad2 + Hash( Msgs + C + Master(NC, NS, SecretC) + Pad1)) } KS Master(NC, NS, SecretC) Master(NC, NS, SecretC)

  45. Crypto Summary • Encryption scheme: encrypt(key, plaintext) decrypt(key ,ciphertext) • Secret vs. public key • Public key: publishing key does not reveal key • Secret key: more efficient; can have key = key • Hash function • Map long text to short hash; ideally, no collisions • Keyed hash (MAC) for message authentication • Signature scheme • Private key and public key provide authentication -1 -1 -1 -1

  46. Limitations of cryptography • Most security problems are not crypto problems • This is good • Cryptography works! • This is bad • People make other mistakes; crypto doesn’t solve them • Examples • Deployment and management problems [Anderson] • Ineffective use of cryptography • Example 802.11b WEP protocol

  47. Why cryptosystems fail [Anderson] • Security failures not publicized • Government: top secret • Military: top secret • Private companies • Embarrassment • Stock price • Liability • Paper reports problems in banking industry • Anderson hired as consultant representing unhappy customers in 1992 class action suit

  48. Anderson study of bank ATMs • US Federal Reserve regulations • Customer not liable unless bank proves fraud • UK regulations significantly weaker • Banker denial and negligence • Teenage girl in Ashton under Lyme • Convicted of stealing from her father, forced to plead guilty, later determined to be bank error • Sheffield police sergeant • Charged with theft and suspended from job; bank error • 1992 class action suit

  49. Sources of ATM Fraud • Internal Fraud • PINs issued through branches, not post • Bank employees know customer’s PIN numbers • One maintenance engineer modified an ATM • Recorded bank account numbers and PINs • One bank issues “master” cards to employees • Can debit cash from customer accounts • Bank with good security removed control to cut cost • No prior study of cost/benefit; no actual cost reduction • Increase in internal fraud at significant cost • Employees did not report losses to management out of fear

  50. Sources of ATM Fraud • External Fraud • Full account numbers on ATM receipts • Create counterfeit cards • Attackers observe customers, record PIN • Get account number from discarded receipt • One sys: Telephone card treated as previous bank card • Apparently programming bug • Attackers observe customer, use telephone card • Attackers produce fake ATMs that record PIN • Postal interception accounts for 30% of UK fraud • Nonetheless, banks have poor postal control procedures • Many other problems • Test sequence causes ATM to output 10 banknotes

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